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Coupeville’s Koa Davison and Jered Brown (1) clamp down on defense. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Mason Grove lofts a shot over the tall trees.

Xavier Murdy can feel the playoff excitement.

Jacobi Pilgrim dishes the rock.

Jered Brown fires up a runner in the paint.

Gavin Knoblich keeps his shooting form flawless.

Hawthorne Wolfe makes it rain.

Murdy’s fan club gets rowdy.

All good things must come to an end, but not before a last batch of photos.

The Coupeville High School boys basketball squad closed its season Saturday with a home playoff loss to Mount Baker, but the action kept wanderin’ paparazzi John Fisken busy.

The pics above are courtesy him, but are just the beginning of what he snapped.

To see everything he shot, and possibly purchase some glossy memories of hardwood heroics, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Sports/Coupeville-Basketball-2019-2020/BBB-2020-02-08-playoff-vs-Mt-Baker/

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Jacobi Pilgrim was a key part of a very-deep group of CHS senior basketball players. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Hawthorne Wolfe will return.

He and fellow sophomore Xavier Murdy were the only non-seniors on this year’s Coupeville High School boys basketball team, unless we also count brief cameos from Daniel Olson and Grady Rickner.

But it’s Hawk and X who will be looked to as the leaders when the Wolf hoops program moves into a new era, and a new league, next season.

So it’s a true positive that, as he exited the gym Saturday after Coupeville fell 69-48 to visiting Mount Baker in a loser-out playoff game, Wolfe only had one thing on his mind.

“I just want to say how much these seniors, all of them, mean to me,” he said.

Saturday’s loss ended Coupeville’s season, a win shy of making it to the double-elimination round of the district tourney, while Baker moves on to play King’s next week.

While the Wolves finished 6-13, they were just a few plays away from wins in half their losses, and never failed to sell out every time on the floor.

That traces back to the work put in by the Class of 2020, said CHS coach Brad Sherman.

“They’re a really cool group of kids, and I’m very proud of them,” he said. “Of how hard they always played, and how they played with a lot of class.”

Sherman also pointed to the positive impact the Wolf seniors had on helping CHS basketball coaches rebuild the youth program aimed at bringing elementary school children into the sport.

With sessions held on Saturday mornings, the Coupeville players often had to pull themselves back out of bed after Friday night games, but they always did.

And right at the forefront, each time, coaching, reffing, teaching and inspiring, were the 12th graders.

“A lot of people are getting excited about Coupeville basketball again,” Sherman said. “The seniors have put in so much work the last couple of years, and are such a huge part of what we’re doing.

“We’ve grown the youth program from 20-30 kids to 80, and a lot of it is because of that senior group,” he added.

“We told them, they should be proud of all of that, win, lose, or otherwise. There is nothing to hang our heads about.”

Six seniors made their final appearance on the CHS floor Saturday — Mason Grove, Koa Davison, Jacobi Pilgrim, Ulrik Wells, Gavin Knoblich, and Jered Brown, who was the lone Wolf to play on the varsity all four seasons.

Coupeville loses 11 seniors total, with Tucker Hall, Chris Ruck, Jean Lund-Olsen, Chris Cernick, and Sean Toomey-Stout also departing.

Toomey-Stout, a one-man wrecking crew who has used his springy legs, tenacious attitude, and hands o’ steel to top the Wolves in most stat categories the past two years, was out of state for a family funeral.

With “The Torpedo” not in action, that left Coupeville at a disadvantage on the boards, something which was compounded when Davison was injured shortly after scoring his team’s first bucket of the night.

The lanky big man hobbled back on the floor to play in the fourth quarter, but his absence for 2.5 quarters hurt on a night when Coupeville had a short bench.

Mount Baker entered the playoffs at just 5-15, but comes out of the ultra-competitive 1A/2A/3A Northwest Conference, which skews records.

The Mountaineers, while they didn’t have a ton of height, were quick, efficient, aggressive, and deadly shooters.

None more so than junior Braedan Hart, who tagged Coupeville for 31 points, hitting seven shots from behind the three-point arc.

The Wolves never led, falling behind 10-2 to start the first quarter, but fought back and kept the game close until a third quarter letdown.

Murdy rippled the nets for a three-ball of his own to stop Baker’s initial run, then Wolfe collected Coupeville’s final six points of the opening quarter, slashing hard to the hoop for buckets against a ferocious defense.

Down 18-11 at the first break, Coupeville put together a 7-0 run midway through the second quarter to cut the lead to five, and had the deficit back to four with seconds to play in the half.

Hart delivered a dagger, however, burying a three-ball right before the break to stake the Mountaineers to a 32-25 advantage.

Grove opened the second half with a trey which sweetly dropped through the net, then Wells rolled into the paint and hit a soft jumper and we had a game at 34-30.

But then the offense vanished.

Coupeville shots which were dropping started clanging instead, and a scrambling Baker defense forced several key turnovers, fueling a 15-3 surge which put the Wolves on their heels.

The only positive in the stretch was a three-ball from the top of the arc by Knoblich, but that wasn’t enough to stem the tide, and the deficit soared from four to 16 as the end of the quarter neared.

The Wolves never got closer than 14 after that, and Hart banged away for 11 of his 31 in the final frame, helping make the final score seem more lopsided than it really was for much of the night.

Coupeville’s sophomore duo paced the team in scoring, with Wolfe banking in 13 points, and Murdy adding 10.

Grove went off for all nine of his points in the second half, and his final made shot, a fourth-quarter three-ball, gave him the season scoring crown in the closest race the CHS boys hoops program has seen in 103 seasons.

The man who will launch from anywhere finished his final campaign with 254 points, narrowly edging Wolfe, who tossed in 252 this season.

The two-point differential is the smallest ever between Coupeville’s #1 and #2 varsity scorers, after three previous teams saw a three-point difference.

In 1993-1994, Brad Miller edged Gabe McMurray 238-235, in 1990-1991 Jason McFadyen held off Sean Dillon 261-258, and way back in 1939-1940, Banky Fisher topped Gaylord Stidham 44-41.

And yes, that really is supposed to say just 44-41. It was a way different game back then.

Grove, who was a swing player as a sophomore, then a full-time varsity gunner the past two seasons, departs having scored 414 points, which puts him #54 on the CHS boys career scoring chart.

Wolfe, with two seasons ahead of him, has 410 points (the most scored by a Coupeville boy through their sophomore season) and is #55 all-time.

CHS got scoring from almost everyone on the floor Saturday, with Wells (8), Knoblich (3), Davison (2), Pilgrim (2), and Brown (1) also tallying points.

The lone Wolf not to score was sophomore Grady Rickner, a JV star who got to make a late-game appearance, a herald of positive things to come.

 

Final (unofficial) season scoring stats:

Mason Grove – 254
Hawthorne Wolfe
– 252
Sean Toomey-Stout
– 113
Xavier Murdy
– 95
Koa Davison
– 83
Ulrik Wells
– 74
Jacobi Pilgrim
– 67
Jered Brown
– 56
Gavin Knoblich
– 56
Jean Lund-Olsen
– 10
Tucker Hall
– 6
Daniel Olson
– 2

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Coupeville PA announcer Moose Moran loves calling big plays for Wolf stars like Mason Grove and Hawthorne Wolfe. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Wolfe is on pace to be the first (or maybe second) CHS boy to score at least 400 career varsity points by the end of their sophomore season.

It’s maybe the best start in program history.

As he heads into a loser-out home playoff game Saturday, Hawthorne Wolfe is setting the nets afire.

With 397 points and counting, the Coupeville High School sophomore has tallied arguably more points at this stage of his varsity career than any other Wolf boys basketball player ever.

At least when it comes to numbers I can 100% stand behind.

There is one reason to pump the brakes, at least a bit.

Wolfe is definitely one of three CHS hoops stars to top 300 points by the end of their sophomore year, with the other two being Mike Criscuola (368) and Mike Bagby (359).

But, when it comes to Criscoula, who played in the ’50s, when 8th graders were eligible for the high school varsity team, his numbers may never be truly complete.

The yearbook for his first season includes him in the team photo — “Big Mike,” rockin’ glasses and a barrel chest, is already a man among boys, even at that early moment — but does not include him on the team’s scoring list.

Which, based on stories told by people from his time period, is a crock.

But all I have to go on is what I have to go on, and newspaper stories of the time are also no help with recreating Criscuola’s 8th grade scoring totals.

So, we’ll toss an asterisk in there and plow ahead.

Either way, Wolfe is chasing legends while helping bring a buzz to the CHS gym.

He’s rattled the rims for 239 points through 18 games as a sophomore, just off senior Mason Grove, who’s singed the nets for 245 points.

Toss in 158 as a freshman, when he led the team in scoring, and Wolfe is a three-ball away from becoming just the 59th Coupeville boy to crack the 400-point club across 103 seasons.

Nothing is guaranteed, and injuries, transfers, and life have all left their mark on the program’s career scoring list.

I mean, Joe Whitney could have been the GOAT, but achieved that status in Lynden, not Coupeville, after transferring before his senior season.

Things happen.

That said, Wolfe, who sits at #59 on the career scoring chart heading into Saturday’s bout with Mount Baker, is set up to make a run at all the records.

Grove, a three-ball assassin from way back, is a hair ahead of him at #57 with 405 points, but, as a senior, time is no longer on his side.

Stay healthy, stay focused, keep working, remain confident, but not driven by ego, hold on to the joy that comes from the game.

Do that, and Hawk and fellow sophomore sensation Xavier Murdy (89 career points and counting) can captivate Wolf Nation over the next two seasons.

If you look at the 31 Wolves who cracked 600 points, almost to a man, their scoring totals went up as juniors and seniors.

From that group, Wade Ellsworth and Rich Morris didn’t score their first varsity point at CHS until their junior season, while Gavin Keohane only had three points exiting his sophomore year.

Six other Wolves also didn’t get their first varsity point until their junior seasons, yet still topped 400 for their careers.

Then there’s Jack Elzinga, who sits with Criscuola, Tom Sahli, and Jerry Zylstra, as ’50s stars whose full numbers may never be finalized.

“The Zinger” tossed in 646 points across his last two years, which puts him #25 all-time.

But, he also played varsity ball as a sophomore during the 1953-54 season, and stats from that campaign seem lost to time, which hurts both him and Zylstra, a teammate on that squad.

Plus, to be fair to the immortals who trod the hardwood in the ’70s, including Jeff Stone (tied for #1), Randy Keefe (#3), and Bill Jarrell (#12), they never had the chance to play four years like Wolfe and Murdy will.

Back then, thanks to Coupeville having a junior high and not a middle school, 9th graders weren’t eligible to play for the high school team.

Life, um, finds a way … to mess with everyone’s prep hoops career.

But we roll on.

So, with all that in mind, a look at how many points every player still ahead of Wolfe on the career chart scored through their sophomore season:

 

Jeff Stone — 176 of 1137
Mike Bagby — 359 of 1137
Randy Keefe — 293 of 1088
Jeff Rhubottom — 228 of 1012
Mike Criscuola — 368(?) of 979(?) (*Missing 8th grade stats*)
Bill Riley — 160 of 934
Pete Petrov — 201 of 917
Brad Sherman — 203 of 874
Denny Clark — 185 of 869
Arik Garthwaite — 285 of 867
Bill Jarrell — 83 of 855
Hunter Smith — 133 of 847
Corey Cross — 215 of 811
Barry Brown — 221 of 769
Hunter Hammer — 212 of 755
Steve Whitney — 180 of 730
Dan Neider — 143 of 729
Chris Good — 64 of 688
Gavin Keohane — 3 of 677
Virgil Roehl — 192 of 674
Foster Faris — 95 of 668
Pat Bennett — 207 of 659
Wade Ellsworth — 0 of 659
Jason McFadyen — 122 of 654
Jack Elzinga — ? of 646(?) (*Missing sophomore stats*)
Rich Morris — 0 of 637
Kramer O’Keefe — 186 of 636
Wiley Hesselgrave — 142 of 632
John O’Grady — 188 of 611
Greg White — 212 of 604
Joe Whitney — 213 of 601
Brian Miller — 157 of 597
Mike Syreen
— 193 of 594
Gabe McMurray
— 2 of 592
Pat Clark
— 12 of 583
Randy Duggan
— 0 of 552
Roy Marti
— 16 of 551
Jim Syreen
— 176 of 550
Marc Bissett
— 41 of 549
Denny Zylstra
— 16 of 538
Brad Miller
— 66 of 526
Gary Faris
— 86 of 524
JJ Marti
— 156 of 520
Cody Peters
— 0 of 518
David Lortz
— 31 of 502
Jason Bagby
— 18 of 499
Pat O’Grady
— 12 of 472
Sean Dillon
— 11 of 469
Frank Marti
— 64 of 462
Gary Hammons
— 11 of 443
Del O’Shell
— 0 of 440
Tony Ford
— 76 of 432
Caleb Powell
— 113 of 421
Ben Biskovich
— 0 of 407
Casey Clark
— 0 of 407
Nick Sellgren
— 0 of 406
Mason Grove
— 51 of 405
Jerry Zylstra
— ? of 405(?) (*Missing sophomore stats*)

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Gavin Knoblich and the Coupeville High School varsity boys hoops squad host a playoff game Saturday. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

They’re coming home.

A narrow loss at Sultan Tuesday night in the regular-season finale means the Coupeville High School boys varsity basketball squad will open the playoffs on their own court.

Despite 23 points from senior sniper Mason Grove, the Wolves fell 66-59 to the Turks in a game which decided the #4 and #5 playoff seeds from the North Sound Conference.

Coupeville finished league play at 2-7, a game off of Sultan, which swept the season series from the Wolves to go 3-6.

As a #4 seed, CHS would have advanced straight away to the double-elimination portion of the district playoffs.

Instead, as a #5 seed, the Wolves, who sit at 6-12 overall, will host Mount Baker, the #4 seed from the Northwest Conference, in a loser-out play-in game.

That rumble goes down Saturday, February 8, with tip-off set for 7 PM.

Mount Baker is 5-14 with one regular-season game left to play, but the Mountaineers play in a 1A/2A/3A league, which tends to skew records a bit.

Win Saturday, and the Wolves move on to play games Feb. 10 and 12.

To see the playoff bracket, pop over to:

http://www.nscathletics.com/tournament.php?tournament_id=3213&sport=3

Coming off an emotional Senior Night win over Granite Falls in which it punched its playoff ticket, Coupeville was looking for a bit of revenge against Sultan.

The first time around, the Wolves led for much of the game, before falling by five.

This time out, CHS stayed close, but couldn’t get over the hump.

Grove nailed the first two of his game-high seven three-balls in the opening quarter, while fellow backcourt gunner Hawthorne Wolfe added four points, but Coupeville trailed 17-13 at the first break.

From there, Sultan, which got double-digits scoring from three players, stretched the lead to 32-26 at the half, clung to a 52-47 advantage after three quarters, and held on for the crucial win.

While the Turks got 42 points combined from the trio of Austin Wood (16), Tyler Sargent (14), and Jeremy John (12), Coupeville’s big three virtually matched them.

Grove, who hit at least one three-ball in every quarter as he put up 23, was backed by sophomores Xavier Murdy (9) and Wolfe (8).

Sean Toomey-Stout (4), Gavin Knoblich (4), Koa Davison (4), Jered Brown (3), Jacobi Pilgrim (2), and Ulrik Wells (2) also scored, as every Wolf to hit the floor put the ball through the hoop.

It was a milestone night for Grove, as the senior cracked the 400-point club.

Heading into his final playoff run, he has 405 points, putting him #57 on the CHS boys hoops career scoring list, which stretches across 103 seasons.

Wolfe is just a three-ball away from joining his older teammate in the club, and his 397 points has him sitting #59 all-time.

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Grady Rickner dropped in 15 points Tuesday as Coupeville’s JV closed with a win at Sultan. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Don’t call it a comeback, but do call it a win.

With Coupeville High School JV boys basketball coach Chris Smith at home for daughter Scout’s Senior Night festivities Tuesday, CHS Athletic Director Willie Smith returned to the bench.

For one night at least.

And the transition was fairly seamless, as the (slightly) older of the Smith boys let the Wolf shooters run wild in a 72-50 win at Sultan.

The victory lifts the JV’s final mark to 5-4 in North Sound Conference play, 10-7 overall.

Coupeville came out on fire, with six different players scoring during a 21-13 first-quarter surge.

Daniel Olson had the hottest hand in the early going, knocking down a quick seven points, while Logan Martin added six to tease the explosion which was to come.

The CHS sophomore, who has been electric of late, went off in the finale, racking up a season-high 29 points.

After starting with back-to-back six-point quarters, Martin rippled the nets for 13 in the third frame, then closed with a modest four.

Up 31-23 at the half, Coupeville hammered the Turks in the second half, stretching the margin out to 54-37 after three quarters of play, then gliding in for the lopsided win.

Grady Rickner added 15 points in support of Martin, while Olson finished with 11.

Rounding out the offensive attack were Chris Ruck (4), TJ Rickner (4), Alex Jimenez (4), Cody Roberts (3), and Miles Davidson (2), while Andrew Aparicio chipped in with strong work on the defensive side of the floor.

 

Final (unofficial) season scoring stats:

Logan Martin – 162
Daniel Olson – 153
Grady Rickner – 148
Sage Downes – 140
Cody Roberts – 61
Alex Murdy – 54
Alex Jimenez – 43
TJ Rickner – 35
Xavier Murdy – 33
Miles Davidson – 32
Chris Cernick – 18
Chris Ruck – 13
Andrew Aparicio – 10

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